This paper presents an analysis of methane emissions from the Los Angeles Basin at monthly timescales across a 4-year time period-from September 2011 to August 2015. Using observations acquired by a ground-based nearinfrared remote sensing instrument on Mount Wilson, California, combined with atmospheric CH4-CO2 tracer-tracer correlations, we observed .18 to C22% monthly variability in CH4:CO2 from the annual mean in the Los Angeles Basin. Top-down estimates of methane emissions for the basin also exhibit significant monthly variability (-19 to C31% from annual mean and a maximum month-to-month change of 47 %). During this period, methane emissions consistently peaked in the late summer/early fall and winter. The estimated annual methane emissions did not show a statistically significant trend over the 2011 to 2015 time period.
CITATION STYLE
Wong, C. K., Pongetti, T. J., Oda, T., Rao, P., Gurney, K. R., Newman, S., … Sander, S. P. (2016). Monthly trends of methane emissions in Los Angeles from 2011 to 2015 inferred by CLARS-FTS observations. Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics, 16(20), 13121–13130. https://doi.org/10.5194/acp-16-13121-2016
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